The pair — a tech mogul and the daughter of the US President — travelled to a school district in Wilder, Idaho as part of a White House initiative centered on STEM education. The Trump administration and Apple first came together last year to partner on the effort.

Videos taken by media on scene showed Cook and Trump arriving at the school Tuesday.

Cook and Trump's field trip to the school was accompanied by other visitors: protestors. While there were some (including those from ACLU Idaho) who showed up to protest Trump administration immigration policies, there was also a group of Wilder district students who walked out of school to protest the technology-led education program for its failure to actually further education.

According to a White House statement to the media, the visit to Idaho is part of Trump's work on "ongoing workforce development and STEM initiatives." Her efforts featured a trip in March to a job training and science facility in Iowa, a visit she said was spurred by a suggestion from Cook.

In a tweet Tuesday afternoon, Ivanka Trump said the pair would use the visit to examine "firsthand" how technology, specifically Apple products, was being used to further student education. This school district is unique in its technology use — iPads, MacBooks, and Apple TVs have been found in every classroom since 2016.

The presence of Apple technology in the Wilder school district, where over 90 percent of students are eligible for free lunch, is thanks to a grant from the teach giant. Apple pledged $100 million back in 2014 to equip "undeserved schools" in the U.S. with technology that could further their educational experience, and the Wilder school district was one of the first places to be named as a beneficiary.